Clinical Trials in Head Injury

Raj K. Narayan(Temple University Hospital), Mary Ellen Michel(Temple University), Beth Ansell(National Institutes of Health), A. Baethmann(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Anat Biegon(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Michael B. Bracken(Yale University), M. Ross Bullock(Virginia Commonwealth University), Sung C. Choi(Virginia Commonwealth University), Guy L. Clifton(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Charles F. Contant(Temple University), William M. Coplin(Wayne State University), W. Dalton Dietrich(University of Miami), Jamshid Ghajar(Temple University), Sean M. Grady(Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania), Robert G. Grossman(Temple University), Edward D. Hall(Temple University), William Heetderks(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), David A. Hovda(University of California, Los Angeles), Jack Jallo(Temple University), Russell L. Katz(Temple University), Nachshon Knoller(Temple University), Patrick M. Kochanek(University of Pittsburgh), Andrew I.R. Maas(Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences), Jeannine A. Majde(Temple University), Donald W. Marion(University of Pittsburgh), Anthony Marmarou(Virginia Commonwealth University), Lawrence F. Marshall(University of California San Diego), Tracy K. McIntosh(Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania), Emmy R. Miller(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Noel R. Mohberg(Temple University), J. Paul Muizelaar(University of California Davis Medical Center), Lawrence H. Pitts(University of California, San Francisco), Peter D. Quinn(Brain Trauma Foundation), G. Riesenfeld(Temple University), Claudia S. Robertson(Baylor College of Medicine), Kenneth I. Strauss(Temple University), Graham M. Teasdale(Southern General Hospital), Nancy Temkin(University of Washington), Ronald F. Tuma(Temple University), Charles E. Wade(Temple University), Michael Walker(Temple University), Michael Weinrich(Temple University), John Whyte(Temple University), Jack E. Wilberger(Temple University), A. Byron Young(Albert B. Chandler Hospital), Lorraine Yurkewicz(Pfizer (United States))
Journal of Neurotrauma
May 1, 2002
Cited by 906Open Access
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Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a major public health problem globally. In the United States the incidence of closed head injuries admitted to hospitals is conservatively estimated to be 200 per 100,000 population, and the incidence of penetrating head injury is estimated to be 12 per 100,000, the highest of any developed country in the world. This yields an approximate number of 500,000 new cases each year, a sizeable proportion of which demonstrate significant long-term disabilities. Unfortunately, there is a paucity of proven therapies for this disease. For a variety of reasons, clinical trials for this condition have been difficult to design and perform. Despite promising pre-clinical data, most of the trials that have been performed in recent years have failed to demonstrate any significant improvement in outcomes. The reasons for these failures have not always been apparent and any insights gained were not always shared. It was therefore feared that we were running the risk of repeating our mistakes. Recognizing the importance of TBI, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) sponsored a workshop that brought together experts from clinical, research, and pharmaceutical backgrounds. This workshop proved to be very informative and yielded many insights into previous and future TBI trials. This paper is an attempt to summarize the key points made at the workshop. It is hoped that these lessons will enhance the planning and design of future efforts in this important field of research.


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